film / 1976
Network
A news anchor's breakdown becomes television programming, turning anger and despair into ratings.
Why read this guide
This film needs a careful read because media and power shape more than the plot. It keeps Howard Beale and Diana Christensen in view while the ending needs more than a simple plot answer.
WikSynth note
Ratings replace judgment: Characters repeatedly ask what will hold the audience, not what is true or humane.
Story in 60 Seconds
The short version
Network follows Howard Beale, a veteran television news anchor who reacts to being fired by announcing that he will kill himself on air. Instead of simply removing him, UBS executives realize his rage draws attention. Programmer Diana Christensen turns Howard's breakdown into a ratings-driven spectacle, while Max Schumacher, Howard's friend and former news executive, watches journalism give way to entertainment logic. Howard becomes a prophetic television figure, but when his message turns against corporate interests, the network treats him as a programming problem. Executives arrange his on-air assassination to protect ratings and control.
Story flow
What happens, at a glance
- 1SetupHoward is fired
His threatened suicide turns a personnel decision into a broadcast crisis.
- 2PressureThe breakdown becomes ratings
Diana sees emotional collapse as programming opportunity.
- 3TurnCorporate power redirects Howard
His prophetic anger is tolerated only while it serves ownership.
- 4EndingHoward is killed on air
The network turns assassination into the final piece of spectacle.
Remember this
The thing to remember is that Network turns media and power into a personal test, not just a film premise. The ending matters because Howard Beale and Diana Christensen reveal what the story has been asking the characters to accept.
Spoiler sectionEnding ExplainedShow ending detailsHide ending details
The ending is shocking because it follows the network's logic to its final point. Howard is not killed by a lone enemy but by a system that has learned to package everything, including murder, as content. His death completes the satire: once human breakdown becomes programming, there is no moral boundary the business cannot turn into format, spectacle, or numbers.
Original context
Why It Matters
The satire is about incentives
The film is not just mocking television style. It shows how business incentives reward spectacle until human reality becomes raw material.
Ratings replace judgment
Characters repeatedly ask what will hold the audience, not what is true or humane. That is why the ending feels inevitable.
Timeline
Major events
- 1Howard is firedHis threatened suicide turns a personnel decision into a broadcast crisis.
- 2The breakdown becomes ratingsDiana sees emotional collapse as programming opportunity.
- 3Corporate power redirects HowardHis prophetic anger is tolerated only while it serves ownership.
- 4Howard is killed on airThe network turns assassination into the final piece of spectacle.
Story mechanics
Key Turning Points
Diana reframes crisis as format
Once Howard's pain is treated as a show concept, the story moves from workplace drama into full institutional satire about television power.
Character Links
Who connects to whom
Character reading
Character Motivations
Diana wants feeling without responsibility
Diana recognizes attention instantly but not obligation. Her ambition makes her brilliant inside the system and frightening outside it emotionally.
Next step
Continue from Network
Finished the guide and want to go further? These links help you look up where to watch, read, borrow, or buy it next.
